Runner

ahd-5
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. One who runs, as for exercise or in a race.
  • noun. One who runs the bases.
  • noun. One who carries the ball.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A fugitive.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. One who carries messages or runs errands.
  • noun. One who serves as an agent or collector, as for a bank or brokerage house.
  • noun. One who solicits business, as for a hotel or store.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A smuggler.
  • noun. A vessel engaged in smuggling.
  • noun. One who operates or manages something.
  • noun. A device in or on which something slides or moves, as.
  • noun. The blade of a skate.
  • noun. The supports on which a drawer slides.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A long narrow carpet.
  • noun. A long narrow tablecloth.
  • noun. A channel along which molten metal is poured into a mold; a gate.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A twining bean plant, such as the scarlet runner.
  • noun. Either of two fast-swimming marine fishes of the family Carangidae, the blue runner (Caranx crysos) of Atlantic waters, or the rainbow runner (Elagatis bipinnulata) of tropical and subtropical waters worldwide.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. One who or that which runs.
  • noun. One who is in the act of running, as in any game or sport.
  • noun. One who frequents or runs habitually to a place.
  • noun. A runaway; a fugitive; a deserter.
  • noun. One who risks or evades dangers, impediments, or legal restrictions, as in blockade-running or smuggling; especially, a smuggler.
  • noun. An operator or manager, as of an engine or a machine.
  • noun. One who goes about on any sort of errand; a messenger; specifically, in Great Britain and in the courts of China, a sheriff's officer; a bailiff; in the United States, one whose business it is to solicit passengers for railways, steamboats, etc.
  • noun. A commercial traveler. [U. S.]
  • noun. A running stream; a run.
  • noun. plural In ornithology, specifically, the Cursores or Brevipennes.
  • noun. plural In entomology, specifically, the cursorial orthopterous insects; the cockroaches. See Cursoria.
  • noun. A carangoid fish, the leather-jacket, Elagatis pinnulatus.
  • noun. In botany, a slender prostrate stem, having a bud at the end which sends out leaves and roots, as in the strawberry; also, a plant that spreads by such creeping stems. Compare run, intransitive verb, 10.
  • noun. In machinery: The tight pulley of a system of fast-and-loose pulleys
  • noun. In a grinding-mill, the stone which is turned, in distinction from the fixed stone, or bedstone. See cuts under mill, 1.
  • noun. In a system of pulleys, a block which moves, as distinguished from a block which is held in a fixed position. Also called running block. See cut under pulley.
  • noun. A single rope rove through a movable block, having an cye or thimble in the end of which a tackle is hooked.
  • noun. In saddlery, a loop of metal, leather, bone, celluloid, ivory, or other material, through which a running or sliding strap or rein is passed: as, the runners for the gag-rein on the throat-latch of a bridle or head-stall.
  • noun. In optical-instrument making, a convex cast-iron support for lenses, used in shaping them by grinding.
  • noun. That part of anything on which it runs or slides: as, the runner or keel of a sleigh or a skate.
  • noun. In molding: A channel cut in the sand of a mold to allow molted metal to run from the furnace to the space to be filled in the mold.
  • noun. The small mass of metal left in this channel, which shows, when the mold is removed, as a projection from the casting. See jet, 4 .
  • noun. In bookbinding, the front board of the plow-press, used in cutting edges.
  • noun. plural In printing: The friction-rollers in the ribs of a printing-press, on which the bed slides to and from impression.
  • noun. A line of corks put on a form of type to prevent the inking-rollers from sagging, and over-coloring the types.
  • Word Usage
    "Inside four overs they had lost Andrew Strauss to Chris Gayle, who batted with a runner and then bowled the third over, without a ­runner, ­presumably because he doesn't actually run, and Owais Shah, caught at the wicket having a wipe."
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Gunnar  Gunner  gunner  stunner  tonner  
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    athlete  bolt  carrier  climber  dancer  
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    Hermes  Iris  Jehu  Mercury  Paul Revere  
    variant